Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- List of Tables and Figures
- Introduction States, Consumption and Managing Religions
- Part I From Deprivitization to Securitization
- Chapter 1 Religion in Liberal and Authoritarian States
- Chapter 2 Religion in Prisons and in Partnership with the State
- Chapter 3 The Secularization Thesis and the Secular State: Reflections with Special Attention to Debates in Australia
- Chapter 4 Secularism, Religion and the Status Quo
- Chapter 5 Managing China's Muslim Minorities: Migration, Labor and the Rise of Ethnoreligious Consciousness among Uyghurs in Urban Xinjiang
- Chapter 6 The Tension Between State and Religion in American Foreign Policy
- Chapter 7 Church, State and Society in Post-communist Europe
- Part II From Pietism to Consumerism
- Part III Concluding Comments
Chapter 6 - The Tension Between State and Religion in American Foreign Policy
from Part I - From Deprivitization to Securitization
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 May 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Notes on Contributors
- List of Tables and Figures
- Introduction States, Consumption and Managing Religions
- Part I From Deprivitization to Securitization
- Chapter 1 Religion in Liberal and Authoritarian States
- Chapter 2 Religion in Prisons and in Partnership with the State
- Chapter 3 The Secularization Thesis and the Secular State: Reflections with Special Attention to Debates in Australia
- Chapter 4 Secularism, Religion and the Status Quo
- Chapter 5 Managing China's Muslim Minorities: Migration, Labor and the Rise of Ethnoreligious Consciousness among Uyghurs in Urban Xinjiang
- Chapter 6 The Tension Between State and Religion in American Foreign Policy
- Chapter 7 Church, State and Society in Post-communist Europe
- Part II From Pietism to Consumerism
- Part III Concluding Comments
Summary
This chapter calls attention to four post-9/11 episodes involving religion and United States foreign policy in an attempt to show the need for greater nuance in our understanding of the relation between religion and state. A number of observations will be drawn from these four cases. For example, it will be seen that at least in the United States, religion is neither entirely privatized nor entirely commodified and that traditional organized religion continues to pack a counterhegemonic punch. However, it will further be seen that this counterhegemonic face of religion finds only little voice in the American public sphere, which remains more open to conservative and – in the current case – imperial deployments of religion. It thus also becomes clear from the cases exhibited that how religion surfaces in the public sphere is not simply an inexorable effect of modernity but rather the result of contestation (see the contributions in Smith, 2003 for a similar line of argument based on other cases). Finally, in the cases under consideration here, there is a stark indication of what may be lost when we lose religion entirely from the public sphere: the loss also of a distinctly moral appraisal of state matters that properly should be appraised morally. Thus, for all the unhelpful moralism traditional religion brings to politics, it may also be that when the public square is entirely naked religiously (Neuhaus, 1986), it ends up morally naked as well.
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- Religion and the StateA Comparative Sociology, pp. 139 - 156Publisher: Anthem PressPrint publication year: 2011